# coding: utf-8 # Import Python Libs from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function, unicode_literals # Import 3rd-party libs import tornado.testing import tornado.gen from tornado.testing import AsyncTestCase import salt.utils.asynchronous as asynchronous class HelperA(object): def __init__(self, io_loop=None): pass @tornado.gen.coroutine def sleep(self): yield tornado.gen.sleep(0.5) raise tornado.gen.Return(True) class HelperB(object): def __init__(self, a=None, io_loop=None): if a is None: a = asynchronous.SyncWrapper(HelperA) self.a = a @tornado.gen.coroutine def sleep(self): yield tornado.gen.sleep(0.5) self.a.sleep() raise tornado.gen.Return(False) class TestSyncWrapper(AsyncTestCase): @tornado.testing.gen_test def test_helpers(self): ''' Test that the helper classes do what we expect within a regular asynchronous env ''' ha = HelperA() ret = yield ha.sleep() self.assertTrue(ret) hb = HelperB() ret = yield hb.sleep() self.assertFalse(ret) def test_basic_wrap(self): ''' Test that we can wrap an asynchronous caller. ''' sync = asynchronous.SyncWrapper(HelperA) ret = sync.sleep() self.assertTrue(ret) def test_double(self): ''' Test when the asynchronous wrapper object itself creates a wrap of another thing This works fine since the second wrap is based on the first's IOLoop so we don't have to worry about complex start/stop mechanics ''' sync = asynchronous.SyncWrapper(HelperB) ret = sync.sleep() self.assertFalse(ret) def test_double_sameloop(self): ''' Test asynchronous wrappers initiated from the same IOLoop, to ensure that we don't wire up both to the same IOLoop (since it causes MANY problems). ''' a = asynchronous.SyncWrapper(HelperA) sync = asynchronous.SyncWrapper(HelperB, (a,)) ret = sync.sleep() self.assertFalse(ret)